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He’s saying sanding....with sand paper. Not media blasting. Sanding them smooth and painting them would hold up the best.I've got a sandblasting setup. What about a sanding followed by a walnut shell blasting or some mild media like that?
These things really would need to hold up to life on a truck wheel, so would need to be made out of some fairly robust material.
I knew what he meant. I worded my sentence poorly.He’s saying sanding....with sand paper. Not media blasting. Sanding them smooth and painting them would hold up the best.
I don’t see center caps as a high wear item. Most are made of plastic anyways.
On way to know is to try. Not much info out there in that regardsI knew what he meant. I worded my sentence poorly.
After a CONVENTIONAL SANDPAPER SANDING to best appearance reasonably possible, after the conventional sanding, would there be any benefit to a mild media blasting?
are you using freecad?
How big of a lathe? I was talking to someone else on another forum and they were just thinking about printing one 100% and giving it a shot. I'm thinking I like the comfort of aluminum personally but If you're ballsy. I can't decide if the failure mode of it would be catastrophic or not if it happened...............Oh dear God that's brilliant I cannot find a steady rest for my leblond Regal
15x40 but it'll swing over 16.
I'd have to figure that thing would be pretty f****** strong. Only thing you could do to make it any more homogeneous would be post-treatment or enabling ironing between layers.
All of the steady rest forces basically upward and towards the rear of the machine I don't think you're going to have a problem if anything it might move a little bit but you should be able to compensate.
It's better than not having a steady rest or using a rigged up set up with two by fours